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Submission + - How a Micro-Budget Student Film Changed Sci-Fi Forever (bbc.com)

An anonymous reader writes: In the early 70s, young filmmakers John Carpenter and Dan O'Bannon created a spaceship tale for a graduation project – little knowing it would influence Alien and many other works. Made for $60,000 by film school students, horror maestro John Carpenter's directorial debut Dark Star is now regarded as a sci-fi cult classic. Having just turned 50 years old, it's a world away from much of the sci-fi that came before it and would come after, neither space odyssey nor space opera, rather a bleak, downbeat and often absurd portrait of a group of people cooped together in a malfunctioning interstellar tin can. Arguably its most famous scene consists of an existential debate between an astronaut and a sentient bomb. Dark Star was a collaboration between Carpenter, who directed and scored the film, and Dan O'Bannon, who in addition to co-writing the script, acted as editor, production designer, and visual effects supervisor, as well as playing the volatile, paranoid Sergeant Pinback. They met as budding filmmakers at the University of Southern California. "While [Carpenter and O'Bannon] couldn't be more dissimilar in personality, they were both very energetic and focused," says Daniel Griffiths, director of Let There Be Light: The Odyssey of Dark Star (2010), the definitive documentary about the making of the film.

The sci-fi films of this period tended to be bleak and dystopian, explains John Kenneth Muir, author of The Films of John Carpenter – films like Silent Running (1972), in which all plant life on Earth is extinct, or George Lucas's 1971 debut THX-1138, in which human emotion is suppressed. "Dark Star arrived in this world of dark, hopeless imaginings, but took the darkness one step further into absurd nihilism." Carpenter and O'Bannon set out to make the "ultimate riff on Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey," says Griffiths. While Kubrick's 1968 film, explains Muir, was one "in which viewers sought meaning in the stars about the nature of humanity, there is no meaning to life in Dark Star". Rather, says Muir, it parodies 2001 "with its own sense of man's irrelevance in the scheme of things". Where Kubrick scored his film with classical music, Dark Star opens with a country song, Benson, Arizona. (A road in the real-life Benson is named in honour of the film). The film was even released with the tagline "the spaced-out odyssey." Dark Star captured the mood of the time in which it was made, says Muir, the atmosphere of Nixon's America. "The 1960s was all about utopian dreaming and bringing change to America in the counterculture. The 1970s represent what writer Johnny Byrne called 'The wake-up from the hippie dream', a reckoning with the fact that the more things change, the more they stay the same." [...]

When Dark Star premiered at the FILMEX expo in 1974, the audience response was largely positive. "They recognised the film's absurdist humour and celebrated its student film roots," says Griffiths. It had a limited theatrical release in 1975, but it was not a commercial success. "The film met with negative reviews from critics, and general disinterest from audiences," says Muir. "Both Carpenter and O'Bannon realised that all the struggles they endured to make the film did not matter to audiences, they only cared about the finished product. I think they were discouraged," says Griffiths. The growth of the VHS market, however, helped it find its audience and propelled it towards cult status. Its influence can still be felt, perhaps most directly in Ridley Scott's Alien, for which O'Bannon, who died in 2009, wrote the screenplay. The two films share DNA. Alien is also set on a grotty working vessel with a bickering crew, only this time the alien wasn't played for laughs.

Submission + - Boeing finally gets working on a 737 replacement (crankyflier.com) 2

s122604 writes: After milking the 737 design for all that it is worth (or maybe, more than its worth), Boeing announces that development of its replacement, the 797, is well underway.
It looks like this will be the end of the iconic flat-bottomed nacelle, and other 737 eccentricities.
Ad speak to follow:
"The 797 delivers enhanced efficiency, improved environmental performance and increased passenger comfort to the single-aisle market. Incorporating advanced technology winglets and efficient engines, the 797 offers excellent economics, reducing fuel use and emissions by 20 percent over the NG while producing a 50 percent smaller noise footprint. Additionally, the 797 offers up to 14 percent lower airframe maintenance costs than the competition. Passengers will enjoy the Boeing Sky Interior, highlighted by modern sculpted sidewalls and window reveals, LED lighting that enhances the sense of spaciousness and larger pivoting overhead storage bins."

Comment Related, but different (Score 1) 56

As for using boron and expecting nuclear things to happen, there is something similar that is already a thing. It's called boron-neutron capture therapy. It involves a chemotherapy medication that is not yet active. It incorporates boron in its structure, but is not actually active until the boron captures a neutron and transmutes into carbon. The idea is to inject the medication then aim a neutron beam at the tumor. The substance is transmuted at the beam and becomes active - but only there.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/p...

So transmuting boron really is a thing. Whether it captures a proton as easily as it captures a neutron is another question.

Comment Next up, microplastics (Score 1) 243

I recently read where the majority of the microplastics that we're finding every, including inside our tissues, in placentas, and such is coming from. Tires. Perhaps the car really is killing us, and the US is more in love with cars than almost anywhere. I wonder what these stats are like in Germany, possibly the only place more car-happy than the US?

Comment Re: What's the severance package these days? (Score 1) 34

In the old days it was something like two weeks per year of service, to a maximum of six months. The other aspect that affected where I worked was that the state required 90 days notice prior to layoffs of some size or greater. (Forget the threshold) So they'd lay people off immediately and they would be on the payroll but not working for 90 days. Then the severance kicked in.

I manged to survive the layoffs at IBM, then was sold to Global Foundries in 2015 with 5000 friends and a bunch of real estate.

Submission + - Roku bricking TVs unless you agree to new dispute resolution provisions (roku.com)

blastard writes: Users of Roku devices, including TVs are finding their access blocked by a dialog box requiring users to agree to new dispute resolution terms. Users can click the asterisk to get some details, but there is no ability to decline. Users cannot opt to use the TV even in "dumb" mode.

Comment What's the severance package these days? (Score 2) 34

In the old days when there was a decent severance package, volunteering for layoff was a good way to retire with a bonus. Other than a few specific times there wasn't a formal way to do so, but there was an informal path. Way back when I was on vacation over the layoff. When I came back someone I enjoyed talking with was gone. I found out he had been laid off and left with a smile on his face. (He was quite a bit older than me.)

Comment Lest you be too quick to criticize (Score 5, Interesting) 163

As a man in his late 60s, I've gotten the impression over the years, and my doctor has not denied this, that every man will die with prostate cancer. Notice I said "with", not "of". My interpretation is that the biological engineering of the prostate just isn't that good - they're failure prone. And let's face it, they're good enough. They practically always get us through our reproductive years. The "bad" cases of prostate cancer - like Frank Zappa and Daniel Fogleberg, hit in the late forties or early fifties. That's after normal reproduction, though still during child rearing years. Usually it's later than that, when the kids have flown the coop.

The other factor is if or when prostate cancer metastasizes. If it does, it's really nasty, one of the nastier cancers, and doesn't respond well to treatment. But catching it early and proper treatment generally keeps it at bay. It's a "maintainable" condition, which is probably why they're looking at re-classifying it.

Yes, my father had it. A friend of mine has it. My brother might have it. I had a scare almost a decade ago but am apparently OK. I absolutely get my routine check on it.

Comment Re:They're already firing people with AI (Score 2) 53

I wonder if the CxO is more readily replaced by an AI bot. The lower level people generally have to deal with other people. The CxOs do too, but far fewer people and they likely do it in more specialized jargon - the type of thing an AI could do well at. They also need access to an inhuman breadth and depth of knowledge - another thing an AI is good at.

There have been many quips about Amazon using algorithms to direct human workers. Maybe they haven't experimented enough yet with moving those algorithms up the chain yet.

Submission + - Master encryption key for Hollywood movies expires 3

innocent_white_lamb writes: Did your local multiplex suddenly close on Sunday?
A cryptographic key used to master all movies distributed by Deluxe expired on December 30.
This means that almost all Hollywood movies will no longer play on many commercial cinema servers. In particular, many showings of Wonka and Aquaman had to be cancelled due to the expired encryption key.
Deluxe and the movie companies have been frantically trying to remaster and send out revised versions of current movies over the past few days.
Nobody knows what will happen to older movie titles since everything mastered by Deluxe since 2011 may be affected and may need to be remastered if it is to be shown in movie theatres again.

Comment Late 70's (Score 2) 43

When I was in college in the latter half of the 1970's one of the local alternative rock radio stations was using "paraquat test kits" as the prizes in their radio contests. At the time they were saying that the US government was spraying paraquat on marijuana fields. Unethical growers would hurry up and harvest the fields, getting the tainted product to market before it shriveled up.

Someone felt that using this tainted product was a bad idea and came up with a test kit.

Submission + - Restoring a 1986 DEC PDP/11 Minicomputer - Will it boot?? (youtube.com) 1

Shayde writes: I've been working on a PDP/11 I basically got as a 'barn find' from an estate sale a year ago. The project has absolutely had it's ups and downs, as the knowledgebase for these machines is aging quickly. I'm hoping to restore my own expertise with this build, but it's been challenging finding parts, technical details, and just plain information.

I leaned pretty heavily on the folks at the Vintage Computing Federation (vcfed.org), as well as connections I've made in the industry — and made some great progress.

The latest chapter in how it's going was just posted, check it out if you're keen on retrocomputing and old minicomputers and DEC gear.

Comment Re:Douglas Adams Shada (Score 1) 53

Some time earlier I had a VHS of Shada using whatever footage they had plus Tom Baker narrating the missing parts and filling them in. This animated version might be fun. It's been long enough that I've pretty much forgotten everything except that the one scene in the boat made it into the Five Doctors special.

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